OU-COM Participates in Race for the Cure
Team Ladies for Ladies raises more than $1,000
Colleen Kiphart
May 21, 2009
On May 16,
several OU-HCOM medical students went to Columbus
to participate in the Susan G. Komen Race for
the Cure, a national event to raise funds and
awareness about breast cancer.
The OU-HCOM
students garnered more than $1,000 in donations
for the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation,
a national organization that supports OU-HCOM’s
Breast and Cervical Cancer Program (BCCP), which
provides free breast and cervical cancer
screenings to uninsured and underinsured women
in Appalachian Ohio counties.
“It’s important
to give back to this organization, since it has
provided our program with more than $540,000 to
fund breast cancer screenings and treatment for
women in Southeastern Ohio,” says Cindy
Greenlee, nurse practitioner with the
college’s Office of Community Health Programs (CHP).
Joanne Bray,
OU-HCOM director of clinical competency
assessment, agrees, “(Komen) has done so much to
support us throughout the years.
It is nice to be able to return our support for
them.”
The OU-HCOM
team, named Ladies for Ladies, raced among more
than 46,000 participants this year. The event
raised $2 million for the foundation to continue
its mission of providing breast cancer screening
and treatment services to the public.
“It was such a
moving experience,” Bray says, “There were all
kinds of people – men, women, families – and
they were all in this one cause. Along the race
there were musicians and volunteers encouraging
you to keep going. It was just wonderful.”
Two
mother-daughter pairs from OU-HCOM ran the race,
including: CHP Director Kathy Trace with her
daughter, Misty Montgomery; and Janice Smith,
BCCP nurse coordinator and breast cancer
survivor, with her daughter, Amy.
OU-HCOM was
represented not only on the track, but also in
the booths lining the road. Students manned a
booth to share literature about CHP services at
OU-HCOM.
Among the more
striking images from the day was the team
honoring Columbus anchorwoman Heather Pick, who
lost her battle with breast cancer on November
7.
“There were
5,000 people who they called themselves
Heather’s Team and wore bright pink wigs in
honor of her. You turned the corner onto High
Street and there was this sea of pink hair,”
Bray recalls, adding, “I encourage anybody who
supports breast cancer awareness to join in next
year. This is something you will never forget.”